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Children of the Promise

Tuesday · Anchor: Gal.3.26-29

From the sermon Treatment of Disciples

Paul's words in Galatians are staggering when you sit with them: 'If you are Christ's, then you are Abraham's offspring, heirs according to promise.' This isn't just legal language. It's family language.

When God made His covenant with Abraham, He promised to bless those who blessed him and curse those who cursed him. That promise didn't evaporate. It found its fullest expression in Jesus — and now, in everyone who is united to Jesus by faith.

This means that when someone blesses you as a believer, they are blessing Christ. When someone curses you, they are cursing Christ. You are not just a random individual trying to make it through life. You are a child of the King, an heir of ancient promises, a branch grafted into a story that began before you were born.

But here's where it gets personal: if you are an heir of these promises, so is every other believer. That person who annoys you at church? Heir. That Christian whose politics make you cringe? Heir. That new believer who doesn't yet understand grace? Heir.

We are not isolated followers. We are a family, bound together not by preference or compatibility, but by the blood of Christ. And God takes the treatment of His children seriously — not because we're impressive, but because we belong to His Son.

Today, let this truth settle in: you are not alone. You are part of a family that stretches back to Abraham and forward into eternity. And every person in that family matters to God.

Pause and consider

How does knowing you are an heir of God's promises change the way you see yourself? How does it change the way you see other believers?

Prayer

Lord, thank You for grafting me into Your family. Help me to see my brothers and sisters not as strangers or annoyances, but as co-heirs with Christ. Teach me to honor the family You have given me. Amen.